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Older Adults More Likely to Disclose Suicidal Thoughts As They Age

By Lisa Rapaport

More than one in five older adults who commit suicide disclose their intention to kill themselves before taking their own lives, a U.S. study suggests.

Overall, 23% of suicide victims age 50 or older shared suicidal thoughts with another person in the month before their death, the study found. Disclosure rates were higher among the elderly, and more common when people had chronic health problems or suffered from depression.

Many older adults who commit suicide without sharing their intentions in advance may have been reluctant to discuss these feelings because they were afraid how doctors or family members might react, said lead study author Namkee Choi, of the University of Texas at Austin Steve Hicks School of Social Work.

“Some older adults at risk of suicide may not want to disclose their suicide intent if they think family members and healthcare and social service providers may force them into inpatient treatment or dismiss their disclosure,” Choi said by email.

“Healthcare providers, especially primary care physicians who frequently see older adults with health problems and depression, should routinely assess suicide risk along with access to guns and other means of suicide,” Choi added.

For the study, Choi and colleagues examined data on 46,857 suicide deaths among adults 50 or older in U.S. states participating in a national reporting system from 2005 through 2014.

Overall, 10,971 people in the study had disclosed an explicit intent to take their own lives, shared an indirect interest in doing something to end their pain and suffering, or attempted suicide at least once in the month before they died by suicide.

This didn’t include people who shared their plans to kill themselves right before they did it, because this didn’t provide time to intervene to stop the suicide, researchers note in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, online October 3.

People who did share their intentions before committing suicide were more likely to be older, white, married and military veterans, the study found.

Individuals who disclosed suicidal thoughts were also more likely to have depression and to have chronic health problems, the study also found.

Most often, people who shared suicidal thoughts told an intimate partner or other family member, and not a health professional.

People were less likely to share their intentions to commit suicide when they planned to use a gun or try to hang or suffocate themselves than when they were considering other methods, the study also found.One limitation of the study is that researchers lacked data to distinguish between verbal disclosure of suicidal thoughts and unsuccessful suicide attempts, the authors note.

Even so, the findings highlight a need for health care providers to discuss suicide with older adults in a way that’s sensitive and encourages conversation, said Dr. Linda Ganzini, a psychiatry researcher at Oregon Health and Science University in Portland who wasn’t involved in the study.

“One myth is the idea that there are 'talkers’ and 'doers,’ that is if people talk about suicide, they are less likely to attempt suicide,” Ganzini said by email.

“The opposite is true,” Ganzini said. “One of the most important warning signs for suicide attempts is talking about wanting to die. Families should take talk of wanting to die seriously and take steps to obtain mental health treatment.”The Suicide Prevention Resource Center (http://www.sprc.org/states) offers free online training in suicide prevention and links to local resources where families may go for help, said Anthony Fulginiti, a social work researcher at the University of Denver who wasn’t involved in the study.

“Being able to articulate one’s pain is hard to do,” Fulginiti said by email. “Being able to react in a way that doesn’t make a person feel alienated is hard to do. So we have to practice if are going to get better at it. This is likely to help shape spaces where more disclosures happen.”